There are many problems plaguing the youth justice system, including faults in the probation system, high levels of recidivism and lack of access to resources for low-income and minority youth. However, one problem that is seldom discussed and has a significant impact on youth is the use of detention centers. The Juvenile Justice Advocates at Howard University are an excellent example of how advocacy can make a difference in the lives of detained youth.
Bridge the Gap: An Interview with Jeff Williams
Confronting Youth Criminalization: An Interview with Iliana Pujols
Hope for Youth Who Have Committed Violent Crime: a Trauma-Informed Approach to Restoration
Texas alone cannot address the issues contributing to the violent behaviors of youth landing them in correctional facilities and the recidivism that results when they return to the same social groups and environments where they developed these behaviors. Families, communities and churches all have contributions to make.
Hope and Healing in the Youth Justice System: An Interview with Dr. Tracee Perryman
Chattanooga: A City at a Crossroad
Chattanooga, located in the southeastern corner of Tennessee, made national headlines in late May after a deadly shooting occurred in the city’s downtown riverfront area. The most disturbing detail of this shooting, without a doubt, is that it was a victimization of the city’s youth, by the city’s youth. Six teens were shot and two were sent to the ICU at the hands of their peers. Regrettably, this would not be the last tragedy of the summer: three months later, in mid-August, a sixteen-year-old was shot and killed — again, by one of his peers. Even more regrettably, these shootings find themselves lost within a larger narrative — one which tells a story of a city where gun violence, gang violence, and crime plague its youth. But there is hope, still. The story has yet to end because the city refuses to abandon its youth to this epidemic.
More Places to Build Lives: A Christian Perspective on Zoning Reform
Walking around downtown, in the shadows of the Independent and the Austonian — the two tallest residential skyscrapers west of the Mississippi — and among the Teslas and Porsches that lined the streets, I gawked in wonder at the how these incarnations of vast wealth could exist right beside evidence of great poverty. I watched as groups of homeless people sat unmoving under awnings and in alleys, sleeping or quietly speaking among themselves, while well-dressed couples and families debated where along Congress Avenue to get a nice Sunday brunch.
Reforming the Housing First Model: Expanding Resources for Chronic Homelessness
Loving Our Neighbors Experiencing Homelessness
Do you know your neighbors? Do you really know them? If you were asked to write down the names of the people who live on every side of you, how many of them would you be able to name? This is the question, posed during a church service, that sparked Mark Ferguson’s journey to get to know his neighbors better and to think beyond ordinary definitions of what it means to love one’s neighbor as oneself.
Celebrating 10 Years of Shared Justice: An Interview with Katie Thompson
A Both/And Reframing of Religious Freedom for Social Services
This article engages the strengths, opportunities, and challenges of cross-cultural religious literacy (CCRL) in the field of human services in the United States, with a focus on faith-based social services organizations. It will examine how religious freedom is an necessity for religious organizations that provide social services.